“This was our second response out there. We did go out there days earlier with an incident involving the mom, and I believe the 14-year-old," said Bell. “Deputies talked with the mom. Mom, at the time, she did not want to file any charges against the 14-year-old.”

“They were like children having problems,” said Robin Coney, Hall’s aunt. “She was trying to get them help and stuff, and was going to send them off because they didn’t go to school."

If under 16 years old, a parent can take a child with behavioral problems to youth court, where it will be determined if the child qualifies for detention or a training school.

(Parents should let law enforcement know, as soon as possible, if they have been threaten or abused by the child.)

“We have got to get a better handle on this when stuff like this happens," added Bell. “We’ve got to report it through the youth court so we can get a proceeding done. So we can try to see what’s going on with these kids. No one ever wants to hear about kids taking their mother’s life. It’s just a tragedy to happen.”

The 12-year-old has had a hearing and will undergo a psychological evaluation, and make another appearance before the youth court judge.

The 14-year-old is being held in a cell, alone, at the Pike County Jail. She has a $150,000.00 bond.

The flood threat in the South will be discussed Thursday, when the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration releases its 2019 spring outlook. Experts plan a briefing on their flood forecast at the National Water Center in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.